On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (6)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
^ %i /-* t <ObfT£ 51,00 <*
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
mine hoot ! Bring wine enough , and fear not for the cost . When the poor man treats his friends , he pays for the feast with his blood 1 ' " We quote the following , — " an old tale and often told , "—on account of the singular character , the local colouring , as it may be termed , of the misfortunes imprecated on the deceiver : —
" THE MALEDICTION . "A youth and a maiden are ascending a steep mountain . The youth sings gaily , and caresses his coarser . But the maiden Walks wearily by his side , erer sighing . •« Let me mount up behind thee , young lover , ' she pleads gently , ' for I am tired ; the road is stony and I cannot walk . ' 11 * I would take the up behind , ' replies the youth , * but I cannot . My charger is small and his feet are delicate . He can now hardly bear my body and its sins , my harness and my aims . ' i Vfchy heart is pitiless , ' answers the gi rl wildly . * Thou hast stolen me from my kindred , and now abandon me in this desert 1 God grant that thou th y self may fall into slavery among the Turks , that thy feet and hands may be shackled with irons , that love and remorse may haunt thee in thy saddest days , that my misery may come home to thee , that-thy steed may foil thee , that thon mayest bite the dust in shame , that thou mayst be nine times wedded and have nine sons ; then , that thou znayst marry again , and have a daughter ere one comes to bring the water in thy prison . ' ' But the youth still rides a-singing on his way . "
Though our extracts have been numerous , we must find room for one more , a wild mythological legend . The grand desolate conclusion is very fine . ' '"' . ¦ * ' THE SOTT AND TH 1 ? MOON . "Jot nine long : years the bright sun has been seeking for a bride , and nine coursers haVe grown weary with the fatigue of his journeys : for he has travelled through earth and air with the speed of an arrow or the wind . He has tired his steeds , but he has not found a mate . The only maiden who has met with favour in his sight is his sister Ilena " . ^ Be my bride , sweet sister Ilena Cozinzena , ' pleads the brilliant Day Good ; our hair is of the same golden hue , and we are equally beautifuL 1 am the brighter , but thou the genuerYmme eyes are the most ardent , but thine are the most soft . ' " ¦* © -bright and spotless brother , ' answers Dena Cozinzena , mournfully : * a brother and a sister-ma ? not marry , for it would be a sin ! ' .. . u The :. jBun darkens at thesis'words , and addresses himself to God , praying that he may niarryjus sister Ilena Oozinzena , once in earth or air . there is no maiden so beautifuL "Th e angry Deity motions bun to follow , and-leads him through , hell and paradise ; thrr iteh the one to frighten the Sun , and through the other to delight - him . He then bids him , choose between them . " And the Sun shining brighUy answers— Better hell than that I should wander for ever lonely through the world ! Yes , even hell with 'Ilena Cozinzena , ' "Then the Sun returns to his betrothed , anil places a crown of gold upon her brow ; the crown of a queen . He gives her also a robe made of precious stones of as many colours as the rainbow , and then leads hear rebelliously to the altar ; * J "P ^ tfiert ; ther lamps go out , and the walls of the temple shake and tremble . The priest ^ are . ' struck' dumb , and their sacred robes fall off . The beautiful bride , horror-BWafe ^ ijfs ^ s an iron hand descend from the heavens ; it seizes and casts her into the sea . -Y ^ WHiftt * Sun grows pale , arid rising into the air , he sets towards the west , descending into the waters , where his bride has disappeared . _ JSut the offended Deity stretches forth his hand over the sea , and changing Ilena Cozinzena into a golden sphere , she becomes the Moon . An awful voice is then heard in « M * e * T ens , pronouncing the doom of the disobedient . ' Thou Ilena Cozinzena , and thou JPiP * ' f'QfV&to ** ® un * ' Ye shall gaze upon each other from afar , and follow each other tbroDgn inimitable space for evermore , drawing nearer never ! ' "
We nave been , of course , influenced in our selections by their length and variety $ but the reader will find in the volume many poems of equals if not ^ tiptfc * beauty . Before concluding ; this notice , -we must remark that tlie music of six national Rouman airs , appended , render the wort additionally interesting . J
Untitled Article
EASTER FESTIVITIES .
Untitled Article
Will our readers believe it ? Vivian , whose audacity has shocked as many tijnes , has now surpassed himself , and , with reckless coolness , has sent the above blank and paltry asterisks as his copy ! We learn that the unfortunate culprit is prostrate ; the brilliancy of the season has been too much for him ; he has gone to " fields and pastures new " to recruit ; but we trust that , when he returns , he will apologise to an . expectant public for this gross insult . However , we cannot do better than publish the blank * as one of Vivian ' s most characteristic contributions . What to do in his absence ? We confess—that is , a sub-editor confesses - —that Tie is obliged to compile from the Times' account of the theatres , beginning with Monday at
DRURY-LANE . u The company which appeared last night was , we presume , the first instalment of a new troupe announced to give operatic performances , in Italian and German , from the present time , until the termination of the season . The directors of the Royal Opera—for that is the title under which the new enterprise has been advertised—have issued an address , in which some plain truths are advanced , in few words , and without parade . The gist of their preamble is—that , while the Germans , French , and Italians have operatic theatres , to which the mass of the people can obtain admission at a very moderate charge , in England there is nothing of the kind ; that it is quite possible , nevertheless , to present something of the kind , and in a highly respectable manner ; that the great success of M . Jufflen , Mr . Hullah , and other innovators , who have had sufficient courage
to give musical entertainments on a large scale , and at minimum prices , has shown a lOve of music to exist very generally among the London public ; and that there is no reason why the support which has fceeri accorded to various kinds of concerts by all classes of the community should be denied to operatic performances , presented under similar circumstances , and with the same desire to combine excellence with cheapness . We have nothing to say against these propositions , and we hope , as we believe , that the managers of the Royal Opera will he enabled to make good their words . Much , if not all , depends upon themselves , and on the spirit in which they carry out their undertaking . The performance of iVbrnuz , in Italian , was' a favourable beginning . On the whole , we have heard inferior attempts at high class and high-priced theatres ; and , in every respect , it was creditable and effective . A band of more than seventy
performers , under the direction of no less excellent a conductor than Herr Lindpaintner , a chorus of fifty , or thereabouts , and principals in some cases unexceptionable , and in most of average merit ,. presented an ensemble against which , however effects of detail might be criticised , little could be objected as a whole . " The Times then proceeds to details , praising Madame Caradori , who is a German soprano , with " a tall , commanding figure , " and " a more than common share of dramatic energy . " The Adelgisa , tod , comes in for a share of praise . Mademoiselle Sedlatzek , observes the Time * , " is a young German singer of good talent and promise , who has only very recently come into notice . She went through that Interesting though subordinate part very efficiently , and in the two duets , the first or which was encored , fairly divided the applause' with Madame Caradori . " Of the gentlemen little is said , -which is kind . Formes sang in " God save tie Queen , " at the end of the opera . The house was crowded , and encored everything .
THE HAYMARKET Continues the revue style of piece , of which Mr . Buckstone ' s Ascent of Mount Parnnssus and the Camp at the Olympic were successful examples . The new Haymarket revue is very similar in principle to the Ascent of Mount Parnassus . It is called Mr . Buckstone ' s Voyage round the Globe ( in Leicestersquare ) . Wherever Mr . Buckstone roams , and whatever climes he sees ( in a dream on the staircase of the Great Globe ) , the visions which rise before him are invariably of London lions—the Chinese jugglers , with their knifethrowing trick ; Miss Cushman as Meg Merrilies , the Astley ' s elephants , and the Sea of Ice at the Adelphi . Every scene is as good as its original , and there is , of course , much besides to " amuse and to instruct'" in this geographical jeu ( T esprit of Planches .
THE LYCEUM Has no burlesque this Easter , and on Monday the four pieces played were old favourites . A new comedietta was produced on Wednesday , called Give a Dog dn III Name . It was well played b y Charles Mathews and Miss Oliver , and , though awfully French in a moral point of view at the beginning , dexterously evaded the French termination , and concluded with , an appeal to English sentiments . It was thoroughly successful .
THE ADELPHI , Following out its ' peculiar course of turning to purposes of nmusement whatever topic of the day is uppermost , gives us —let the Juries tell what" The results of the 'Overland Journey to Constantinople as undertaken by Lord Bateman , with interesting particulars of the fair Sophia . ' The ballad , containing an account of the adventures of this * noble Lord of high degree' and his attendant ' Proud Young Porter , ' has long been an established favourite , and the mode in which it has been treated on the present occasion will not fail to add to its celebrity . The incidents of the ballad were followed by the additions and alterations rendered necessary by the Easter holidays and the Eastern question . After an explanator 3 ' lecture from Mr . Rogers , the adventures commence with the fairy camp by moonlight , in which the corps cU ballet representing the allied troops , after going through a most BatiHfuctory course of military
Untitled Article
BOOKS ON OUR TABLE . Eitiory of OUver Cromwell , and the English Commonwealth . By M . Guizot 2 vols . % Richard Bentley . Companions of my Solitude . ^ John w . Parker and g ^ Comparative Anatomy . Translated from tho German , | y WaKta J . Bunnttv-M . D . Vol . L T Trubner and Co . TUFH-st False Step . A Poem . By Jamea Cargill Guthrie . Johnstono and Hunter . The Land we Live in ; a Pictorial and Literary Sketch Book . Wm . S . Orr and Co . The last Days of Pompeii . ( Railway Library . ) George Boutledge and Co . The Gauntlet of Freedom . TboMa 8 Harrison . Easy Education . By W . EL Bainbrigge , F . R . C . S . Blacklader and Co . Julian ; or , the Close of an Era . By L . F . Bangener . 2 vols .
Arthur Hall , Virtue , and Co . Nanette and her Lovers . By Talbot Gwrynne . Smith , Elder , and Co . The Laws of War , affecting Commerce and Shipping . By H . Byerley Thomson , Esq ., B . A . Smith , Elder , and Co . A Poem anda Pamphlet . Chapman and Hall . Voltaic and his Times . By L . P . Bangener . Thomas Constable and Co . Manual q f Civil Law ,- or , Examination in the Institutes of Justinian . By Patrick Cumin , Stevens and Norton A Descriptive A Oas illustrative q / 'the Seats of War , with iive coloured Maps .
William S . Orr and Co Chambers ' * Journal Part III . W . and R . Chambers The ^ chtt ^ Snfir ^^ and **— *** " *• PAawH * ssaas The North A merican Review John Cha p ™" The Life of Nicholas I . Emperor of All the Russias . By Edward H . Michelsen . William Spooncr J ^ naU ^ FoLtor ^ Vd ° ? ^^ * " ^^ ( Standard library . - ) Translated by Mra Tf > & WiSea ^ deliver ' ° f T ° rquato Tasao . ( Illustrated Library . ) Translated by J . H _ _ . " Henry 0 Bohn The LampUghtmr
. ™ , __ « .. » . ~ -r ~ ,.. ~ ,. Clarke , Bceton , and Co JW By jMn 68 Macfarla * . Eobert HttrdWicke The Two JV ** .. By E . B .
^ %I /-* T ≪Obft£ 51,00 ≪*
Cfjt M % .
Untitled Article
Vivian .
Untitled Article
3 SQ THE LEADER . [ Saturday ,
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), April 22, 1854, page 380, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse2.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2035/page/20/
-